Southern mountain mint, Pycnanthemum pycnanthemoides (Leavenw.) Fernald, is a mountain mint species endemic to the southeastern United States. The odorants responsible for the plant's odor have not been previously characterized.… Click to show full abstract
Southern mountain mint, Pycnanthemum pycnanthemoides (Leavenw.) Fernald, is a mountain mint species endemic to the southeastern United States. The odorants responsible for the plant's odor have not been previously characterized. In this study, 28 odorants were identified in a high-vacuum distillate of P. pycnanthemoides employing gas chromatography-olfactometry and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. Flavor dilution (FD) factors were determined by aroma extract dilution analysis. Ten odorants with FD factors ≥16 were quantitated by stable isotope dilution assays, odor activity values (OAVs) were calculated, and the stereochemistry of chiral odorants was determined. Odorants with OAV ≥1 included β-ionone (floral, violet; OAV 310), piperitenone (mint; OAV 100), piperitone (mint; OAV 87), linalool (floral, citrus; OAV 45), myrcene (terpeny; OAV 35), (R)-(+)-pulegone (mint, medicinal; OAV 18), (2S,5R)-(-)-menthone (mint, fresh; OAV 6.6), and 1,8-cineole (eucalyptus; OAV 4.0). An odor simulation model based on the quantitative analysis was a close match to the sensory attributes of an aqueous infusion of dried P. pycnanthemoides. The study's results establish insights into the complex odor profile of P. pycnanthemoides and provide a foundation for future studies on the odor variability within P. pycnanthemoides and other species of the Pycnanthemum genus.
               
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